Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 06511, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, 11794, USA.
Evolution. 2022 Oct;76(10):2347-2360. doi: 10.1111/evo.14591. Epub 2022 Aug 30.
Although evolvability of genes and traits may promote specialization during species diversification, how ecology subsequently restricts such variation remains unclear. Chemosensation requires animals to decipher a complex chemical background to locate fitness-related resources, and thus the underlying genomic architecture and morphology must cope with constant exposure to a changing odorant landscape; detecting adaptation amidst extensive chemosensory diversity is an open challenge. In phyllostomid bats, an ecologically diverse clade that evolved plant visiting from a presumed insectivorous ancestor, the evolution of novel food detection mechanisms is suggested to be a key innovation, as plant-visiting species rely strongly on olfaction, supplementarily using echolocation. If this is true, exceptional variation in underlying olfactory genes and phenotypes may have preceded dietary diversification. We compared olfactory receptor (OR) genes sequenced from olfactory epithelium transcriptomes and olfactory epithelium surface area of bats with differing diets. Surprisingly, although OR evolution rates were quite variable and generally high, they are largely independent of diet. Olfactory epithelial surface area, however, is relatively larger in plant-visiting bats and there is an inverse relationship between OR evolution rates and surface area. Relatively larger surface areas suggest greater reliance on olfactory detection and stronger constraint on maintaining an already diverse OR repertoire. Instead of the typical case in which specialization and elaboration are coupled with rapid diversification of associated genes, here the relevant genes are already evolving so quickly that increased reliance on smell has led to stabilizing selection, presumably to maintain the ability to consistently discriminate among specific odorants-a potential ecological constraint on sensory evolution.
尽管基因和性状的进化能力可能在物种多样化过程中促进专业化,但生态随后如何限制这种变异尚不清楚。化学感觉要求动物破译复杂的化学背景,以找到与健康相关的资源,因此,潜在的基因组结构和形态必须应对不断暴露于不断变化的气味景观中;在广泛的化学感觉多样性中检测适应是一个开放的挑战。在 Phyllostomid 蝙蝠中,这是一个生态多样化的分支,从假定的食虫祖先进化为植物访问者,新的食物检测机制的进化被认为是一个关键的创新,因为植物访问物种强烈依赖嗅觉,补充使用回声定位。如果这是真的,潜在嗅觉基因和表型的特殊变异可能先于饮食多样化。我们比较了来自具有不同饮食的蝙蝠嗅上皮转录组和嗅上皮表面积的嗅觉受体 (OR) 基因。令人惊讶的是,尽管 OR 进化率变化相当大,而且通常很高,但它们在很大程度上与饮食无关。然而,嗅觉上皮表面积在植物访问蝙蝠中相对较大,并且 OR 进化率与表面积之间存在反比关系。相对较大的表面积表明对嗅觉检测的依赖性更大,对维持已经多样化的 OR 库的约束更强。在这里,相关基因已经进化得如此之快,以至于对嗅觉的依赖增加导致了稳定选择,而不是通常情况下专业化和细化与相关基因的快速多样化相关,这可能是对感官进化的生态限制。